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With Orion the Eclipse platform team is building browser-based development tools designed to integrate well with other developer sites and resources at web scale. Our approach builds heavily on the architecture of the web (hyperlinks for tool navigation and RESTful interactions with services) and our UIs are minimal and task focused to promote more of a web experience and allow us to better use the native capabilities of today's modern browsers.

Since June the team has been self-hosting at orion.eclipse.org and we can now talk more convincingly about the pain points driving our next steps. This talk will demo the current state of Orion, and explain the vision of moving software development to the web as a web experience.

The importance of EMF for current and future software projects is undeniable. Thus is the importance for distributed and scalable model persistence, which is perfectly solved by CDO. But now it is time for the next step and to focus on the integration of modeling based user interfaces.

This talk will briefly introduce the main concepts of Dawn. This includes the basic principles, the Dawn runtime and the generation aspects of the framework. We will explore the main features released with the Indigo version of Dawn (1.0) and will have a look to the interesting feature plan on the road to Juno. A small demonstration will give you an impression how great it feels to be freed from the bounds of local model persistence and to dive into the ocean of true real-time collaborative modeling.

The Git distributed versioning system is being increasingly adopted by the developer community. Using Git for version control makes Gerrit the natural choice for code reviews. Besides source code, requirements and build artifacts lay an important role in the development cycle which are often managed in Hudson and Bugzilla. While these tools enable exciting development process improvements, adapting to new workflows and learning how to push, pull and fetch can be daunting. Furthermore, switching between command line, web-browser and Eclipse-based tool interfaces breaks the flow.
For tasks, Mylyn already streamlines workflow by providing first-class integration with the IDE. The recent Mylyn project restructuring now enables the same integrated workflows for code reviews, builds and version control systems like Git. For example, a developer can use the Mylyn Task List to track a requirement. On task activation, the EGit Mylyn integration automatically branches managing the change in the workspace. Once a commit is pushed Gerrit stages the change, creates a code review and a Hudson build is triggered to execute tests. Meanwhile, the Mylyn Reviews project enables a team member to complete a code review and provide feedback to the developer, all without leaving the IDE. We will show how the tools available in the Mylyn project work together to seamlessly integrate development artifacts in Eclipse and provide traceability all the way from the requirement to the final merge into the production branch.

REST is a technique for providing light weight Web Services and in Java EE the Java API for RESTful Services (JAX-RS) provides the service framework. The Java Persistence API (JPA) provides the data access and Java Architecture for XML Binding (JAXB) handles marshalling the persistent entities into and out of XML. Sound great! There are a number of issues developers have to deal with when using them together. In this session we'll look at how to build RESTful services with Eclipse WTP using these standard technologies, their integration points and where the pain points are, and how to avoid them using EclipseLink's advanced REST/JAXB/JPA integrations features.